Development (Paradigm) Failures
Journal
Journal of Development Economics
ISSN
0304-3878
ISSN-Digital
1872-6089
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2013-03-01
Author(s)
Dreher, Axel
Abstract
Over time, the international development community has advocated various development paradigms, but countries following these paradigms have often performed poorly. We provide an explanation for this poor performance. In our model, the political leader of a developing country chooses a policy and whether to implement it in an honest or corrupt manner. These choices affect domestic production and aid inflows. Production is high when productive capacity is high, and when the policy is appropriate in the country-specific circumstances and implemented honestly. Aid inflows are high when the policy is close to the paradigm. In equilibrium, countries with low productive capacity and high corruption resulting from weak political institutions follow the paradigm more closely. Hence, our model suggests that development paradigms have a tendency to fail because they are primarily followed by countries that would fail anyway. We provide empirical evidence in support of the main assumptions and results.
Language
English
Keywords
Economic development
Development paradigms
Foreign aid
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
Refereed
Yes
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher place
Amsterdam
Volume
101
Number
1
Start page
63
End page
74
Pages
12
Subject(s)
Eprints ID
235012